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Mass Murderer Denied PlayStation In Prison, Takes Legal Action

In 1987, Julian Knight shot and killed seven people in Clifton Hill, Melbourne. A further 22 were wounded. He’s currently serving seven life sentences.

He is also now taking the local state’s corrections department to court because they won’t let him have a video game console.

Knight first requested to have a personal computer in his cell seven years ago, but was knocked back. He’s since made a further seven attempts, none of which were successful.

Corrections Victoria’s (the local corrections department) decision to also block his 2009 request for a ā€œPlayStationā€ (it’s not specified which) has led him to say he is being ā€œunfairly treatedā€, as other prisoners have been granted similar requests. So he’s taking his case to the Supreme Court, seeking not only the PlayStation, but the granting of his original request for a PC as well.

This is not a joke.

Knight is in prison having been convicted of the Hoddle Street Massacre, as it became known. A former army cadet, on the evening of August 9, 1987, he climbed atop a billboard – armed with two rifles and a shotgun – and fired at numerous passing cars (as well as a police helicopter) on the Melbourne street.

Hoddle St killer Julian Knight launches legal action over decision not to allow him a PlayStation in his cell [Herald Sun]

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